PORTSIDE Digest - 18 Feb 2013 to 19 Feb 2013 (#2013-42)

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PORTSIDE Digest - 18 Feb 2013 to 19 Feb 2013 (#2013-42)

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Topics of the day:

1. Spanish Doctors and Nurses Protest Privatisation 2. Of Biblical Proportions: Inequality and Poverty Wages 3. Desmond Tutu Blasts US Drones: American or Not, All Victims Are Human 4. Scientists Detail Severe Future Impacts of Climate Change 5. "We Must Unleash Radical Thought": Harry Belafonte



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Date: Tue, 19 Feb 2013 21:14:40 -0500 From: Portside moderator Subject: Spanish Doctors and Nurses Protest Privatisation MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="7d2f304c4543a01567b0d00f50458541" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8Bit

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Spanish Doctors and Nurses Protest Privatisation

February 19, 2013 By blade FRANCE 24 (Sun, 2013-02-17 00:00)

Thousands of Spanish doctors, nurses and other health care workers demonstrated on Sunday in 16 cities against budget cuts and plans to partly privatise medical services.

 

 

Thousands of Spanish doctors, nurses and other health care workers, many wearing white lab coats, demonstrated on Sunday in 16 cities against budget cuts and plans to partly privatise medical services.


Several thousand people marched to Madrid's central Plaza de Cibeles from 27 hospitals in the region, waving signs that read "Your health is being sold" and "Cutting back on health care is a crime".

They chanted, blew whistles and beat drums as they made their way through the streets of the Spanish capital, blocking traffic.

"There is no study that shows that privatising the management of hospitals leads to lower costs. This privatisation hurts patients' health care to benefit other interests," said Emilia Becares, a 46- year-old nurse who went to the protest with her three sons, aged seven, eight and nine.

The Madrid regional government plans to outsource the management of six of 20 large public hospitals and 27 health centres of the 270 in the region.

Spanish health care workers and many patients, who are fiercely protective of the public health system, say private providers will put profits before quality and fire thousands of support staff in favour of cheaper replacements.

"Many medications are no longer provided for free. I am here to defend the public health care system which we have built up over the years," said Carlos Moreno, a 52-year-old doctor who came to the protest decked out in his lab coat.

Smaller protests were held in other Spanish cities including Albacete, Cuenca and Segovia.

Nationally, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's government has slashed health spending by seven billion euros ($9.1 billion) a year as part of a campaign to squeeze 150 billion euros out of the crisis-racked country's budget by 2014.

 

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blade
February 17, 2013
FRANCE 24
Thousands of Spanish doctors, nurses and other health care workers demonstrated on Sunday in 16 cities against budget cuts and plans to partly privatise medical services.


Spanish protesters take part in a demonstration against plans to cut medical spending and privatise hospital services in Madrid on February 17, 2013., ,

Thousands of Spanish doctors, nurses and other health care workers, many wearing white lab coats, demonstrated on Sunday in 16 cities against budget cuts and plans to partly privatise medical services.

Several thousand people marched to Madrid's central Plaza de Cibeles from 27 hospitals in the region, waving signs that read "Your health is being sold" and "Cutting back on health care is a crime".

They chanted, blew whistles and beat drums as they made their way through the streets of the Spanish capital, blocking traffic.

"There is no study that shows that privatising the management of hospitals leads to lower costs. This privatisation hurts patients' health care to benefit other interests," said Emilia Becares, a 46-year-old nurse who went to the protest with her three sons, aged seven, eight and nine.

The Madrid regional government plans to outsource the management of six of 20 large public hospitals and 27 health centres of the 270 in the region.

Spanish health care workers and many patients, who are fiercely protective of the public health system, say private providers will put profits before quality and fire thousands of support staff in favour of cheaper replacements.

"Many medications are no longer provided for free. I am here to defend the public health care system which we have built up over the years," said Carlos Moreno, a 52-year-old doctor who came to the protest decked out in his lab coat.

Smaller protests were held in other Spanish cities including Albacete, Cuenca and Segovia.

Nationally, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's government has slashed health spending by seven billion euros ($9.1 billion) a year as part of a campaign to squeeze 150 billion euros out of the crisis-racked country's budget by 2014.

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Date: Tue, 19 Feb 2013 22:00:27 -0500 From: Portside moderator Subject: Of Biblical Proportions: Inequality and Poverty Wages MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="24f8fa2a5b89f6ca64882be31f6d273d" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8Bit

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Of Biblical Proportions: Inequality and Poverty Wages

February 19, 2013 By By Rev. Jim Conn Frying Pan News (Thu, 2013-02-14 00:00)

Despite the rising indicators of economic recovery, too many working families are discovering there are only poverty jobs, part-time jobs or no jobs at all.


My friend pastors a vibrant congregation in the Mid-City area of Los Angeles. Her people reflect the neighborhood and the church worships in both Spanish and English. In a conversation this week I asked her how her folks were doing. Her voice dropped, and she shook her head. "There are no jobs," she said, "and the ones who work can only get part-time hours." With dismay, she said, "I don't know how they are making it."

I don't either. At one extreme, high-end properties - homes that sell for several millions of dollars - had a banner year in 2012. Sales of super-expensive automobiles reached record levels. Exotic vacation destinations are packed. The number of jobs in Los Angeles County has reached about 4.3 million, almost the number we had before the Great Recession began five years ago, although there are now also more people looking for work than then.

In 1968 a full-time, minimum wage job provided about 86 percent of what it cost to live. Today it takes two people working in a family of four to reach the lowest rung on the slippery ladder of what could remotely be called a middle-income standard of living. These families have a place to live, food, probably an old car that they hope doesn't break down - and they must pray that no one gets hurt on the job or the kids don't get sick. Already they live by borrowing; medical debt would put them under.

About 146 million Americans live in a condition that one weekly news magazine calls"poor-but- working class." Since the recession began in 2008, 60 percent of all the jobs created in this country only pay minimum wage, which stays stuck where it was five years ago, while inflation actually has increased by seven percent. The people with these kinds of jobs do the low-level service work that the rest of us depend on. They wash our cars, watch our pre-schoolers, care for our elders who are too ill to get out of the house. They sew in sweatshops, clear tables at restaurants, weed gardens. Overwhelmingly they work in fast food and low-end retail.

Half of all this poor-but-working class is composed of white folks who mostly live in the South and Southwest, but they represent only 10 percent of this caste-of-perpetual-debt. A quarter of Latinos and African American people live in circumstances of working poverty. Right now in America, one out of every four employees earns less than $10 an hour, and almost a third of all workers don't receive paid sick leave. So this is not just a problem for "them" -  some faceless demographic to be viewed at a distance. It affects working people right here.

Conventional wisdom says that education changes these circumstances. That used to be true, but now the average high school graduate earns $12,000 a year less than the same graduate in 1980. Getting a college education can help, of course. However, only 30 percent of Americans earn a BA degree, and 15 percent of those grads are driving taxis, and 25 percent of retail clerks have their bachelors - not big-paying jobs. These economic realities mean that what we used to call "structural unemployment" or "under-employment" has become the pervasive mode of living for most workers. The American Dream has been reduced to a persistent struggle to make ends meet.

I have long believed that if people work all day they should earn enough to provide shelter, food and health care for themselves and their families. Even the Bible - from Moses to Jesus - calls for employers to pay a wage people can live on. But that is not, apparently, the common practice these days. Now, despite the rising indicators of economic recovery, too many working families are discovering there are only poverty jobs, part-time jobs or no jobs at all.
______

Rev. Jim Conn is the founding minister of the Church in Ocean Park and served on the Santa Monica City Council and as that city's mayor. He helped found Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice, Los Angeles, and was its second chair, and was a founder of Santa Monica's renter's rights campaign.
 

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By Rev. Jim Conn
February 14, 2013
Frying Pan News
Despite the rising indicators of economic recovery, too many working families are discovering there are only poverty jobs, part-time jobs or no jobs at all.

My friend pastors a vibrant congregation in the Mid-City area of Los Angeles. Her people reflect the neighborhood and the church worships in both Spanish and English. In a conversation this week I asked her how her folks were doing. Her voice dropped, and she shook her head. "There are no jobs," she said, "and the ones who work can only get part-time hours." With dismay, she said, "I don't know how they are making it."

I don't either. At one extreme, high-end properties - homes that sell for several millions of dollars - had a banner year in 2012. Sales of super-expensive automobiles reached record levels. Exotic vacation destinations are packed. The number of jobs in Los Angeles County has reached about 4.3 million, almost the number we had before the Great Recession began five years ago, although there are now also more people looking for work than then.

In 1968 a full-time, minimum wage job provided about 86 percent of what it cost to live. Today it takes two people working in a family of four to reach the lowest rung on the slippery ladder of what could remotely be called a middle-income standard of living. These families have a place to live, food, probably an old car that they hope doesn't break down - and they must pray that no one gets hurt on the job or the kids don't get sick. Already they live by borrowing; medical debt would put them under.

About 146 million Americans live in a condition that one weekly news magazine calls"poor-but- working class." Since the recession began in 2008, 60 percent of all the jobs created in this country only pay minimum wage, which stays stuck where it was five years ago, while inflation actually has increased by seven percent. The people with these kinds of jobs do the low-level service work that the rest of us depend on. They wash our cars, watch our pre-schoolers, care for our elders who are too ill to get out of the house. They sew in sweatshops, clear tables at restaurants, weed gardens. Overwhelmingly they work in fast food and low-end retail.

Half of all this poor-but-working class is composed of white folks who mostly live in the South and Southwest, but they represent only 10 percent of this caste-of-perpetual-debt. A quarter of Latinos and African American people live in circumstances of working poverty. Right now in America, one out of every four employees earns less than $10 an hour, and almost a third of all workers don't receive paid sick leave. So this is not just a problem for "them" - some faceless demographic to be viewed at a distance. It affects working people right here.

Conventional wisdom says that education changes these circumstances. That used to be true, but now the average high school graduate earns $12,000 a year less than the same graduate in 1980. Getting a college education can help, of course. However, only 30 percent of Americans earn a BA degree, and 15 percent of those grads are driving taxis, and 25 percent of retail clerks have their bachelors - not big-paying jobs. These economic realities mean that what we used to call "structural unemployment" or "under- employment" has become the pervasive mode of living for most workers. The American Dream has been reduced to a persistent struggle to make ends meet.

I have long believed that if people work all day they should earn enough to provide shelter, food and health care for themselves and their families. Even the Bible - from Moses to Jesus - calls for employers to pay a wage people can live on. But that is not, apparently, the common practice these days. Now, despite the rising indicators of economic recovery, too many working families are discovering there are only poverty jobs, part-time jobs or no jobs at all.
______

Rev. Jim Conn is the founding minister of the Church in Ocean Park and served on the Santa Monica City Council and as that city's mayor. He helped found Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice, Los Angeles, and was its second chair, and was a founder of Santa Monica's renter's rights campaign.

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Date: Tue, 19 Feb 2013 22:25:49 -0500 From: Portside moderator Subject: Desmond Tutu Blasts US Drones: American or Not, All Victims Are Human MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="a9cfbf6f4fd562a6d7a180956f091830" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8Bit

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Desmond Tutu Blasts US Drones: American or Not, All Victims Are Human

February 19, 2013 By By Lauren McCauley, staff writer Common Dreams (Thu, 2013-02-14 00:00)

Tutu: 'Does the US really want to tell those of us in the rest of the world that our lives are not of the same value as yours?'

 


In a letter to the New York Times published Wednesday, South African Nobel Peace Prize laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu challenged the hypocrisy of the US and its citizens for accepting a killer drone program when it pertains to foreign suspects while demanding judicial review when those targets are American citizens.

He writes:

Do the United States and its people really want to tell those of us who live in the rest of the world that our lives are not of the same value as yours? That President Obama can sign off on a decision to kill us with less worry about judicial scrutiny than if the target is an American? Would your Supreme Court really want to tell humankind that we, like the slave Dred Scott in the 19th century, are not as human as you are? I cannot believe it.

I used to say of apartheid that it dehumanized its perpetrators as much as, if not more than, its victims. Your response as a society to Osama bin Laden and his followers threatens to undermine your moral standards and your humanity.

Tutu was responding specifically to an earlier New York Times piece which discussed the idea of a "special court" or tribunal to review drone strikes against US citizens. Though not entirely new, the plan has gained momentum since last week's confirmation hearing of CIA director nominee John Brennan during which lawmakers, including Senators Diane Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Angus King (I-Maine), discussed the option.

During the hearing, Senator King reportedly said he thought the court "would pass constitutional muster only if it were limited to cases involving American citizens."

 

------

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By Lauren McCauley, staff writer
February 14, 2013
Common Dreams
Tutu: 'Does the US really want to tell those of us in the rest of the world that our lives are not of the same value as yours?'


Longtime peace activist and Nobel Prize winner, Archbishop Desmond Tutu., Zak Hussein/PA,

In a letter to the New York Times published Wednesday, South African Nobel Peace Prize laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu challenged the hypocrisy of the US and its citizens for accepting a killer drone program when it pertains to foreign suspects while demanding judicial review when those targets are American citizens.

He writes:

Do the United States and its people really want to tell those of us who live in the rest of the world that our lives are not of the same value as yours? That President Obama can sign off on a decision to kill us with less worry about judicial scrutiny than if the target is an American? Would your Supreme Court really want to tell humankind that we, like the slave Dred Scott in the 19th century, are not as human as you are? I cannot believe it.

I used to say of apartheid that it dehumanized its perpetrators as much as, if not more than, its victims. Your response as a society to Osama bin Laden and his followers threatens to undermine your moral standards and your humanity.

Tutu was responding specifically to an earlier New York Times piece which discussed the idea of a "special court" or tribunal to review drone strikes against US citizens. Though not entirely new, the plan has gained momentum since last week's confirmation hearing of CIA director nominee John Brennan during which lawmakers, including Senators Diane Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Angus King (I-Maine), discussed the option.

During the hearing, Senator King reportedly said he thought the court "would pass constitutional muster only if it were limited to cases involving American citizens."

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Date: Tue, 19 Feb 2013 22:17:49 -0500 From: Portside moderator Subject: Scientists Detail Severe Future Impacts of Climate Change MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="4c3e42086326c7dc45c9f69b9e94d555" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8Bit

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Scientists Detail Severe Future Impacts of Climate Change

February 19, 2013 By By Tiffany Stecker and ClimateWire Scientific American (Tue, 2013-02-19 00:00)

At a U.S. Senate hearing, scientists warned that New Orleans, Florida and other places will be radically transformed if global warming is allowed to continue unabated.

 


In a probable scenario for climate change, New Orleans will no longer exist. Neither will Atlantic City, N.J. Boston will look much like it did in the 17th century, before the city was dredged up to build a port. And Florida will no longer keep its distinct appendage shape.

These geographical changes due to sea-level rise are only the beginning, scientists bluntly stated at a briefing yesterday convened by Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chairwoman Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.).

"Today's talk underscored what I already knew, but gives me more facts," said Boxer. "We have to act because our children and our grandchildren need us to act."

Storms are likely to travel in different patterns than they did before, much like Superstorm Sandy did. Increasing temperatures are changing the cycles of plants and trees and extending the pollination period to exacerbate allergies. In the hottest cities, it will be uncomfortable to step outside during the day. And limited agricultural growth will severely strain the world's ability to feed itself, said a panel composed of two atmospheric scientists, one public health expert and one biological oceanographer.

To read more, go to  Scientific American

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By Tiffany Stecker and ClimateWire
February 19, 2013
Scientific American
At a U.S. Senate hearing, scientists warned that New Orleans, Florida and other places will be radically transformed if global warming is allowed to continue unabated.


FUTURE CHANGE: Scientists warned U.S. senators that climate change could have severe and costly future impacts if not addressed soon. Pictured: Downtown New Orleans, Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina., Flickr/Ross Mayfield,

In a probable scenario for climate change, New Orleans will no longer exist. Neither will Atlantic City, N.J. Boston will look much like it did in the 17th century, before the city was dredged up to build a port. And Florida will no longer keep its distinct appendage shape.

These geographical changes due to sea-level rise are only the beginning, scientists bluntly stated at a briefing yesterday convened by Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chairwoman Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.).

"Today's talk underscored what I already knew, but gives me more facts," said Boxer. "We have to act because our children and our grandchildren need us to act."

Storms are likely to travel in different patterns than they did before, much like Superstorm Sandy did. Increasing temperatures are changing the cycles of plants and trees and extending the pollination period to exacerbate allergies. In the hottest cities, it will be uncomfortable to step outside during the day. And limited agricultural growth will severely strain the world's ability to feed itself, said a panel composed of two atmospheric scientists, one public health expert and one biological oceanographer.

To read more, go to Scientific American

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Date: Tue, 19 Feb 2013 21:49:53 -0500 From: Portside moderator Subject: "We Must Unleash Radical Thought": Harry Belafonte MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="05aa1d936e84f06d5d970b47f1df79b5" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8Bit

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"We Must Unleash Radical Thought": Harry Belafonte

February 19, 2013 By Democracy Now! (Mon, 2013-02-18 00:00)

Harry Belafonte's Stirring Speech Accepting NAACP Spingarn Medal

"We Must Unleash Radical Thought": Harry Belafonte's Stirring Speech  Accepting NAACP Spingarn Medal


               &n bsp; Along with his rise to worldwide stardom, the musician and actor Harry Belafonte has been deeply involved in social activism for decades. One of Dr. Martin Luther King's closest confidants, Belafonte helped organize the March on Washington in 1963. On Friday, the NAACP awarded Belafonte their highest honor, the Spingarn Medal. "Numerous strategies in the quest of our freedom have been played out at all levels of the social spectrum," Belafonte says in his acceptance speech. "What is missing I think from the equation in our struggle today is that we must unleash radical thought... America has never been moved to perfect our desire for greater democracy without radical thinking and radical voices being at the helm of any such a quest."

Guest: Harry Belafonte, Musician, actor, and activist,

           accepting the NAACP Spingarn Medal, the group's

           highest honor.

 

AMY GOODMAN: The son of Caribbean immigrants, Harry Belafonte grew up on the streets of Harlem and Jamaica. In the 50's he spearheaded the Calypso craze, become the first artist in recording history with a million selling album. He was also the first African-American musician to win Emmy. Along with his rise to world wide stardom, Belafonte became deeply involved in the civil rights movement. One of Dr. King's closest confidants, he helped organize the march on Washington in 1963. Well, on Friday night, the NAACP honored him with their highest honor the Spingarn Medal. He began his speech referring to Mayor Cory Booker's introduction.

 HARRY BELAFONTE: Mayor Booker, that was heavy. [Laughter] I don't know that I've ever been introduced quite like that before. [Laughter] As you called out the moments that represent the crossroads of the paths in my life, I'm reminded that no matter how I am anointed for what it is that I do and try to do it was never without the knowledge and the joy that what I said and what I still say was really rooted in the courage and strength of so many remarkable people who befriended me and who counseled me and who became an intricate part of my journey. And to sit here and to watch you do the work that you do in the city of Newark, which is not a garden, not a paradise, but a place of remarkable struggle [Applause] You are to be anointed for how well you are doing your job in Newark. [Applause] But your mother didn?t tell you everything. [Laughter] [Applause] But your daddy was my best friend.

     What I am about to say I had occasion to say a couple of weeks ago. I was in California celebrating the NAACP Image Awards. And what made that event, which I have attended quite often and I have been anointed with the awards at different intervals in my journey, but, what made this one particularly significant was that it was the first time that in the history of the NAACP awards, the Spingarn Medal honoree was being platformed. So, the country go an opportunity to not only look at the young men and women who have achieved so much in the arts, but to also take a moment and a pause to look at our social concerns as well as our social journey.

     The speech I'm about to give is one that I gave the night on television. Some of you may have heard it. And for those of you who haven't, I will give you the opportunity to hear it now. For those who are hearing it for the second time, my hope the redundancy doesn't drive you from the room. But it won't be long. But, it says there is a preciseness to the thought, when I put those thoughts on paper that it was about America as I see it today and where we stand.

     The group that is most devastated by America's obsession with the gun is African-Americans. Although making comparisons can be dangerous, there are times when they must be noted. America has the largest prison population in the world and the over 2 million men, women, and children that make up the incarcerated, the overwhelming majority of them is black. African-Americans are the most unemployed, the most caught in the unjust systems of justice. And the gun game, they are the most hunted. The rivers of blood that wash the streets of our nation flow mostly from the bodies of our black children. Yet, as the great debate emerges on the question of the gun, white America discusses the constitutional issues of ownership while no one speaks to the consequences of our racial carnage.

    Where is the outraged voice of black America? Where and why are we muted? Where are our leaders? Where are our legislators? Where is the church? Not all, but many who have been the recipients of this distinguished award, were men and women who spoke up to remedy the ills of the nation, they were all committed to radical thought. They were my mentors, my inspiration, my moral compass. Through them I understood America's greatness, I understood America's potential. Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois, Martin Luther King, Jr., Eleanor Roosevelt, and others like Fannie Lou Hamer, and Ella Baker, Bobby Kennedy, and Ms. Constance Rice, and perhaps for me most of all, Paul Robeson.

    For me Mr. Robeson was the sparrow. He was an artist who made those of us in the arts understand the depth of that calling when he said, artists are the gatekeepers of truth. We are the civilization's radical voice. Never in the history of black America has there ever been such a harvest of truly gifted and powerfully celebrated artists. Yet, our nation hungers for their radical song. In the field of sports, our presence dominates. In the landscape of corporate power, we have more African-American presence as captains and leaders of industry then we have ever known.

    Yet we suffer still from abject poverty and moral malnutrition. Our only hope lies in the recall of a moment which has been to referred to earlier here, and was my last meeting with Dr. King. It was just before he left to go off to Memphis to join the strike with sanitation workers. We held a strategy meeting and Dr. King ? the meeting was in my home, and Dr. King, during that meeting, appeared to be distracted and in a dark mood. When we asked him what was the matter he said, we have come far in the struggle for integration, and although we may be winning some battles, we have not won the war. And I?ve come to the conclusion that in our struggle to integrate, we may be integrating into a burning house.

     That thought we found it deeply disturbing. And when we asked him if such was his belief, what would he have us do? His reply was, we will have to become firemen. Numerous strategies in the quest of our freedom have been played out at all levels of the social spectrum. Youth groups, women's groups, labor groups, religious groups, the list goes on and on. And yet the opposition persists in its resistance to our quest. What is missing, I think, from the equation in our struggle today is that we must unleash radical thought. America keeps that part of the discourse mute. I would make an appeal for the NAACP as the oldest institution in our quest for human dignity and human rights, that we stimulate more fully the concept and the need for radical thinking. America has never been moved to perfect our desire for greater democracy without radical thinking and radical voices being at the helm of any such quest.

    The pursuit of justice is all I have ever known. And I have often said that what defines a true patriot and reading a book, "The Life of Theodore Roosevelt," I came upon a quote where he said that when the state finds itself moving away from its commitment to the rights of the citizen, when those rights are being trampled and misguided, when there are those who would wrest from the Constitution the quality that it attempted to give all of us then citizens of the nation have not only the obligation, but, the right to challenge the state and those who run it. And he said, if we fail to do that, if we fail to meet that moral criteria, then we the citizens should be charged with patriotic treason. And that struck me because what we're really on is a journey to end the treasonous behavior of the contemporary political scene. And what it is trying to do to steal our votes [Applause] ? to steal our votes. To what it is doing to our women, to what it's doing to our children, to what it's doing to wherever black people have moments of need and want. I would ask that unless Black America ? or I would say that unless Black America raises its voice loud and clear, America ? and it is specifically our responsibility of all cultural diversity that makes up this nation and its promise to be great, the most powerful force is the voice of African-Americans, and America will never become whole and America will never become what it dreams to be until we are truly free, and truly a bigger part of this. [Applause]

AMY GOODMAN: The legendary actor, musician, activist Harry Belafonte, speaking on Friday night, awarded the NAACP's Spingarn Medal. He turns 86 years old on March 1st. You can go to our website for our full interview with Harry Belafonte, our archive of interviews.

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